Donald Trump’s Foreign Policy: ‘America First’

Donald Trump

(CNN)– Donald Trump on Wednesday delivered a major foreign policy speech in Washington, laying out his vision for a foreign policy that will put “America first.”

Trump opened his speech Wednesday vowing to “shake the rust off America’s foreign policy” and said he would outline a vision for a U.S. foreign policy “that replaces randomness with purpose, ideology with strategy and chaos with peace.”

He added, “My foreign policy will always put the interests of the American people and American security first.”

Speaking at the Mayflower Hotel as part of his campaign’s efforts to cast him as a more presidential figure and appeal to Republican Party elites., he opened the speech with measured tones and relied on prepared remarks in place of the off-the-cuff style he often deploys on the campaign trail.

Wednesday’s speech — which comes after Trump completed a five-state sweep on Tuesday, bringing him significantly closer to clinching the GOP presidential nomination — is the first in a series of policy addresses Trump will deliver in the coming weeks as he looks to show a different side of his typically brash persona.

Trump was introduced by Zalmay Khalilzad, President George W. Bush’s former ambassador to Afghanistan, Iraq and the permanent representative to the United Nations.

As well as plugging his new memoir, Khalilzad painted a dire picture of the world, “a period of withdrawal and retreat. Things can still get a lot worse.”

“We have been embroiled in several costly and protracted conflicts and the world has become more complex, unstable and dangerous,” he said, calling Trump a provocative voice in the debate over America’s place in the world.

Trump said during a news conference Tuesday night that he would not lay out a “Trump doctrine” in his speech because “you have to have flexibility.”

“You may say one thing and then the following year you change it because circumstances are going to be different,” Trump said. “You can’t say, this is my doctrine, I will not move. Because countries change, leaders change.”

“It will be a speech on foreign policy, some of my ideas on foreign policy,” Trump told CNN’s Chris Cuomo Wednesday on “New Day.” “It will have to do with some of the economics of foreign policy because we are getting killed on economics. You know I’m an economic person. It’s one of my strengths.”

A slate of veteran Republican operatives whom Trump hired in recent weeks, including his convention manager Paul Manafort, have encouraged Trump to cool his at-times heated rhetoric and plug more resources into Washington outreach.

Those efforts have faced a halting start as Manafort and Trump appeared at odds this weekend over the pace of that transition. As Manafort talked up Trump’s ability to morph into a more presidential figure to appeal to a broader audience, Trump at a rally the following day served up his characteristic brashness, complete with insults aimed at his presidential rivals.

Trump’s speech Wednesday may also help skeptical foreign policy experts drill down on the details of his vision for American foreign policy, which has often been scant on details.

To defeat terrorism, the Republican front-runner has vowed to “bomb the s— out of ISIS,” suggested he would target the families of suspected terrorists and vowed to bomb oil fields in a bid to deprive ISIS of a key financial resource.

Trump’s discussions of foreign policy on the campaign trail have primarily focused on trade, with the billionaire candidate calling for the U.S. to renegotiate what he deems are “stupid” and unbalanced free trade deals. Trump has also called for imposing a 35% tariff on goods imported by American companies who outsource their manufacturing overseas.

Trump’s most extensive remarks on foreign policy have come not in speeches on the campaign trail, but in interviews, including a pair of lengthy exchanges with The New York Times and The Washington Post’s editorial board late last month.

Trump’s speech Wednesday is the second time the real estate mogul has read a prepared speech. Trump first used the teleprompters he has so often derided on the campaign trail late last month when he addressed the annual gathering of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee.

The-CNN-Wire ™ & © 2016 Cable News Network, Inc., a Time Warner Company. All rights reserved.

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